Communications Alert: IRS Urging Certain Groups of Taxpayers to Check Withholding After Tax Law Changes

The IRS continues to urge taxpayers who haven’t yet done a “Paycheck Checkup” to do one as soon as possible to see if they’re having their employer withhold the right amount of tax after major changes in the tax law. Tax prepare-er can can help taxpayers learn if they need to make changes soon to avoid an unwelcome surprise come tax time.

This week, the IRS is focusing on some groups of taxpayers who should especially check their withholding.

Please help us get the word out — the earlier people check and adjust their withholding, the more time there is for withholding to take place evenly during the rest of the year.

Taxpayers that fall in the following groups should contact their tax prepareer as soon as possible for a “Paycheck Checkup”:

  • Taxpayers who got a big refund in 2018
  • Taxpayers with high income or complex return
  • Taxpayers who support dependents who can’t be claimed for the Child Tax Credit
  • Taxpayers with children, other dependents

To schedule your “Paycheck Checkup” contact me today at 580.743.8118

 

What Your Itemized Deductions On Schedule A Will Look Like After Tax Reform

For those of you that travel for work such welders, linemen, etc., I’m sure that you all are experiencing anxieties over what is going to happen concerning your reimbursed job expenses that are being eliminated with the Tax Reform & Jobs Act.

Well, I have an idea and I think and I can help you. Call me if you are interested in finding out more! 580.743.8118

 

The following article was written by  

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kellyphillipserb/2017/12/20/what-your-itemized-deductions-on-schedule-a-will-look-like-after-tax-reform/#14f8528e6334

 

With all of the focus on new tax rates after Congress green-lighted tax reform (you can see those new rates here), it’s easy to forget that some of the biggest changes don’t have anything to do with tax rates: They’re about deductions.

For 2018, the standard deduction amounts will increase from $6,500 for individuals, $9,550 for heads of households (HOH), and $13,000 for married couples filing jointly, to $12,000 for individuals, $18,000 for HOH, and $24,000 for married couples filing jointly. Most taxpayers will claim the standard deduction.

Initially, the change in the standard deduction amounts was meant to simplify the deduction scheme. In other words, most of the itemized deductions would have simply disappeared, leaving behind (initially) the charitable donation deduction and the home mortgage interest deduction. Over the past few weeks, however, those itemized deductions – those found on a Schedule A – have been tweaked.

Here’s how Schedule A will be affected for the 2018 tax year following tax reform (numbers correspond to the numbers in the blue circles on Schedule A – click on the image above to be taken to a larger version):

1. Medical and Dental Expenses. Medical and dental expenses remain in place with a lower floor. We call it the “floor” because you can only deduct expenses over that number. The floor – before tax reform – was 10% of your adjusted gross income (AGI). Here’s how it worked. Let’s say your AGI is $40,000 and your medical expenses were $5,000. Assuming you itemized, you could claim $1,000 as a deduction, or $5,000 in expenses less the floor (10% x $40,000 = $4,000).

Under tax reform, the 7.5% floor is back in place for two years beginning January 1, 2017 – that means that it applies to the 2017 tax year. So assuming the same facts above, you can claim $2,000 as a deduction, or $5,000 in expenses less the floor (7.5% x $40,000 = $3,000).

Again, unlike most of the provisions in the bill, the provision is effective retroactively to the beginning of this year – so you’ll see this change on your 2017 and your 2018 tax returns.

2. State and Local Taxes. Under tax reform, deductions for state and local sales, income, and property taxes normally deducted on a Schedule A remain in place but are limited (see #3 below). Foreign real property taxes may not be deducted under this exception.

3. SALT caps. While SALT deductions remain in place, there is a cap on the aggregate, meaning that the amount that you are claiming for all state and local sales, income, and property taxes together may not exceed $10,000 ($5,000 for married taxpayers filing separately).

State, local, and foreign property taxes, and sales taxes which are deductible on Schedule C, Schedule E, or Schedule F are not capped. This means that, for example, rental property – even if held individually and not in a separate entity – remains deductible and not subject to these limitations.

And yes, Congress already knows what you’re planning, so amounts paid in 2017 for state or local income tax which is imposed for the 2018 tax year will be treated as paid in 2018. In other words, you can’t pre-pay your 2018 state and local income taxes in 2017 to avoid the cap. There is not, to date, a similar restriction for property taxes.

4. Home Mortgage Interest. So, first, the home mortgage interest deduction didn’t disappear. But it did get modified. Here’s what you need to know. First, the definition of acquisition indebtedness is important: It’s indebtedness that is incurred in acquiring, constructing, or substantially improving a qualified residence of the taxpayer and which secures the residence. Home equity indebtedness is indebtedness other than acquisition indebtedness that is secured by a qualified residence. Those distinctions are important (more in a moment) no matter what they’re called by you or by the bank.

As of December 15, 2017, there’s a limit on acquisition indebtedness – your mortgage used to buy, build or improve your home – of $750,000 ($375,000 for married taxpayers filing separately). For mortgages taken out before December 15, 2017, the limit is $1,000,000 ($500,000 for married taxpayers filing separately). It’s even more complicated because beginning in 2026, the cap goes back up to $1,000,000, no matter when you took out the mortgage.

And here’s where that definition is super important: For tax years 2018 through 2025, there is no deduction available for interest on home equity indebtedness.

5. Charitable donations. Charitable donations remain deductible under tax reform. The rules are largely the same with a few changes. First, the percentage limit for charitable for cash donations by an individual taxpayer to public charities and certain other organizations increases from 50% to 60%. Two, taxpayers are no longer entitled to deduct payments made to a college or college athletic department (or similar) in exchange for college athletic event ticket or seating rights at a stadium. Those provisions are effective beginning in 2018.

Effective beginning in 2017, the provision which allows for an exception to the substantiation rule if the donee organization files a return is repealed. What this means to taxpayers: Always get a receipt.

And if you follow me on Twitter, you already know that for some inexplicable reason, the charitable standard mileage rate will not be adjusted for inflation under tax reform. It remains at a disappointing 14 cents per mile (for other mileage rates, click here).

6. Casualty and Theft Losses. The deduction for personal casualty and theft losses is repealed for the tax years 2018 through 2025 except for those losses attributable to a federal disaster as declared by the President (generally, this is meant to allow some relief for victims of Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria).

For more on casualty losses after a disaster, click here.

7. Job Expenses and Miscellaneous Deductions subject to 2% floor. Miscellaneous deductions which exceed 2% of your AGI will be eliminated for the tax years 2018 through 2025. This includes deductions for unreimbursed employee expenses and tax preparation expenses. To be clear, it includes expenses that you incur in your job that are not reimbursed, like tools and supplies; required uniforms not suitable for ordinary wear (like those ABBA costumes); dues and subscriptions; and job search expenses. These expenses also include unreimbursed travel and mileage, as well as the home office deduction.

Please note that the elimination of unreimbursed employee expenses only affects taxpayers who claim an employee-related deduction on Schedule A. If, as a business owner, you typically file a Schedule C, your business-related deductions are not affected by the elimination of Schedule A deductions.

8. Itemized Deductions. The overall limit on itemized deductions is suspended for the tax years 2018 through 2025.

1099 and W-2 Filing

Believe it or not, it’s that time again! There’s only 41 days left before the filing deadline for your Form 1099 and W2’s ( as well as Forms 1098). No need to sweat or search any farther. Let us help you! We handle both filing and mailing these forms for you, and have e-file capabilities. Read on for more details from the IRS about filing requirements or call us at 580.743.8118

Am I Required to File a Form 1099 or Other Information Return?

If you made or received a payment during the calendar year as a small business or self-employed (individual), you are most likely required to file an information return to the IRS. This page is applicable to specific and limited reporting requirements. For more detailed information, please see General Instructions for Certain Information Returns or specific form instructions.

Do not file Copy A of information returns downloaded from the IRS website. The official printed version of the IRS form is scannable, but the online version of it, printed from the website, is not. A penalty may be imposed for filing forms that cannot be scanned.

Made a Payment
Received a Payment and Other Reporting Situations
Not Required to File Information Returns

Made a Payment

If, as part of your trade or business, you made any of the following types of payments, use the link to be directed to information on filing the appropriate information return.

  • Payments, in the course of your trade or business: (1099-MISC(Note: It is important that you place the payment in the proper box on the form. Refer to the instructions for more information.)
    • Services performed by independent contractors or others (not employees of your business) (Box 7)
    • Prizes and awards and certain other payments (see Instructions for Form 1099-MISC, Box 3. Other Income, for more information)
    • Rent (Box 1)
    • Royalties (Box 2)
    • Backup withholding or federal income tax withheld (Box 4)
    • Crewmembers of your fishing boat (Box 5)
    • To physicians, physicians’ corporation or other supplier of health and medical services
      (Box 6)
    • For a purchase of fish from anyone engaged in the trade or business of catching fish (Box 7)
    • Substitute dividends or tax exempt interest payments and you are a broker (Box 8)
    • Crop insurance proceeds (Box 10)
    • Gross proceeds of $600 or more paid to an attorney (generally, Box 7, but see instructions as Box 14 may apply)
  • Interest on a business debt to someone (excluding interest on an obligation issued by an individual) (1099-INT)
  • Dividends or other distributions to a company shareholder (1099-DIV)
  • Distribution from a retirement or profit plan or from an IRA or insurance contract (1099-R)
  • Payments to merchants or other entities in settlement of reportable payment transactions, that is, any payment card or third party network transaction (1099-K)

Received a Payment and Other Reporting Situations

If, as part of your trade or business, you received any of the following types of payments, use the link to be directed to information on filing the appropriate information return.

  • Payment of mortgage interest (including points) or reimbursements of overpaid interest from individuals (1098)
  • Sale or exchange of real estate (1099-S)
  • You are a broker and you sold a covered security belonging to your customer (1099-B)
  • You are an issuer of a security taking a specified corporate action that affects the cost basis of the securities held by others (Form 8937)
  • You released someone from paying a debt secured by property or someone abandoned property that was subject to the debt (1099-A) or otherwise forgave their debt to you (1099-C)
  • You made direct sales of at least $5,000 of consumer products to a buyer for resale anywhere other than a permanent retail establishment (1099-MISC)

Not Required to File Information Returns

You are not required to file information return(s) if any of the following situations apply:

  • You are not engaged in a trade or business.
  • You are engaged in a trade or business and
    • the payment was made to another business that is incorporated, but was not for medical or legal services or
    • the sum of all payments made to the person or unincorporated business is less than $600 in one tax year

https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/am-i-required-to-file-a-form-1099-or-other-information-return

Consumer Alert: IRS Warns Taxpayers, Tax Pros of New Email Scam Targeting Hotmail Users

IR-2017-203, Dec. 13, 2017

WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today warned taxpayers and tax professionals of a new email scam targeting Hotmail users that is being used to steal personal and financial information.

The phishing email subject line reads: “Internal Revenue Service Email No. XXXX | We’re processing your request soon | TXXXXXX-XXXXXXXX”. The email leads taxpayers to sign in to a fake Microsoft page and then asks for personal and financial information.

The IRS has received over 900 complaints about this new phishing scheme that seems to exclusively target Hotmail users. The suspect websites associated with this scam have been shut down, but taxpayers should be on the lookout for similar schemes.

Individuals who receive unsolicited emails claiming to be from the IRS should forward it to phishing@irs.gov and then delete it. It is important to keep in mind the IRS generally does not initiate contact with taxpayers by email to request personal or financial information. For more information, visit the “Tax Scams and Consumer Alerts” page on IRS.gov.

The IRS reminds tax professionals to be aware of phishing emails, free offers and other common tricks by scammers. Tax professionals who have data breaches should contact the IRS immediately through their Stakeholder Liaison. See Data Theft Information for Tax Professionals.

https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/consumer-alert-irs-warns-taxpayers-tax-pros-of-new-email-scam-targeting-hotmail-users 

Winners and Losers of the Senate Tax Bill-by Toni Nitti for Forbes.com/Taxes

(Note from PFS-this seems to be the best source of unbiased information from either side that I can currently find.)

 

As tends to happen this time of year, I awoke this morning to find that a friendly Elf had mysteriously manifested itself in my living room. Only this time, Oscar wasn’t alone. He was toting along something else that, like Oscar, wasn’t here when I went to bed, but that had miraculously became a reality as I dozed: 479-pages of brand new tax law.

That’s right…in the wee hours of the night, as visions of corporate cuts and repealed death taxes danced in Paul Ryan’s head, the Senate overcame the last big hurdle as it speeds towards the most significant tax reform in 31 years, passing its version of HR 1 by a 51-49 vote.

The work is not technically done, however, as the House and Senate must agree on a bill. And while there may be some sticking points — the treatment of pass-through businesses, education incentives, and medical expenses to name a few — the path is cleared for the President to achieve his signature legislative victory and sign a $1.5 trillion tax cut package into law, just in time for Christmas.

Here are a few highlights of the plan:

  • The top individual rate is reduced from 39.6% to 38.5%, and the threshold at which the top rate kicks in is increased from $418,000 for a single/$480,000 for married filing jointly to $500,000/$1,000,000. Further down the brackets, rates are reduced as well, for full detail, see here.
  • The top rate on the income earned by owners of “flow through” businesses — S corporations and partnerships — is reduced from 39.6% to a shade below 30%.
  • The standard deduction is doubled from $6,350 for a single/ $12,700 if married to $12,000/$24,000.
  • Deductions for personal exemptions are repealed, but the child tax credit is increased from $1,000 to $2,000.
  • Many popular itemized deductions — state and local income taxes, casualty losses, and unreimbursed employee expenses, among others — are eliminated.
  • The estate tax exemption is doubled, to $11 million for a single taxpayer and $22 million for married taxpayers.
  • The alternative minimum tax remains intact, although with a higher exemption amount.
  • The corporate rate is reduced from 35% to 20%.
    • Businesses will be able to immediately expense many asset purchases; after five years of 100% expensing, the rate will phase out at 80%/60%/40%/20% rates over the ensuing four years.
    • The international tax regime is completely revamped, shifting from a deferral system to a territorial system.

    As we will discuss below, all of the individual changes listed above, as well as the change in the estate tax, will expire on December 31, 2025 and reset to current law. This budget gimmick was necessary to comply with the Byrd Rule (described below), and will have long-lasting impact.

    Tax reform, of course, creates winners and losers. Let’s see if we can identify who they are…

    Winner: the GOP

    Tonight’s victory belonged solely to the Republicans. The Senate passed the bill without a single “yes” vote from one of its 48 Democrats, but then, this was the plan all along. Using the streamlined “budget reconciliation” process, the GOP needed only a simple majority in the Senate rather than the standard 60 votes, and because Republicans currently control 52 seats, victory was assured provided defections could be minimized.

    The reconciliation process requires three steps:

    Step #1: The House and Senate were required to pass a joint budget that fixed the total amount of revenue that could be lost to tax cuts over the 10-year budget window ending in 2027. This was done back in January, with the cap on cuts for the next decade set at $1.5 trillion.

    Step #2: The final bill could not add more than the agreed-upon $1.5 trillion to the deficit over the next ten years. Last night’s bill came in at a total cost of $1.447 trillion, satisfying this requirement.

    Step #3: The final bill could not add to the deficit beyond the 10-year budget window; the so-called Byrd Rule. After many late-night maneuverings, this requirement was also met, as the final version of HR 1 actually shows a $33 billion decrease to the deficit in year 10, though as described in more detail below, it took no shortage of budget gimmicks to make it work.

    With all three boxes checked, Democratic Senators were shut out of the process. Republican leaders needed only 50 of their 52 Senators to support the bill, and while it was touch-and-go for a few days, they were able to wrangle 51 votes, with only Senator Corker voting against HR 1.

    Loser: Regular Order. Again. 

    Regardless of your political affiliation or opinion of the proposed tax plan, you should be mortified by what took place over the past two weeks in the Senate. First, Senate Finance Committee Leader Orin Hatch neglected to publish legislative text of his proposal until November 21st. At 515 pages, this was no light read, but yet the Finance Committee was somehow familiar enough with its contents to vote to move the bill forward a mere seven days later.

    On the Senate floor, things went from shady to sham rather quickly. First, a list of possible amendments was handed out around Capitol Hill, but only to lobbyists, rather than journalists. Then, after a flurry of 11th-hour bargains were made to nail down the final few wavering Republican Senators, the final version of the bill — now reduced to a lithe 479 pages — was made available in the dead of night, and was voted on before you awoke. Even more embarrassing was the state the text of a bill that will shape our economy for the next decade was in, as it was complete with — and I’m not making this up — key amendments and alterations hand-written into the margins of the page, with large swaths of text simply crossed out. One enterprising twitter personality offered a $25 gift card to anyone who could decipher a critical piece of chicken scratch located on page 187.

    If you’re wondering how 51 Republican Senators can confidently vote for a piece of text so lengthy it would make Tolkien blush, well, they simply can’t. Call me a cynic, but there is no chance any of the Senators fully grasp the impact of the sweeping tax changes they passed last night. I make my living in the Code, and 12 hours later, I’m still grappling with the intent and impact of certain provisions in the bill, as are other tax wonks.

    But make no mistake; these isolation politics are not unique to Republicans; for every person on the left who wakes up this morning wistfully recalling “regular order,” there is one on the right fully prepared to remind them of the Obamacare roll-out in 2010. Perhaps Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell best summed up the new environment of winner-take-all politics by responding to Democratic complaints about the bill thusly: “You complain about process when you’re losing, and that’s what you heard on the floor tonight.” I’m unclear how we got here, but it appears certain that we have entered an era where it is simply inconceivable that both parties could work together to ensure that no one is a loser

    WinnerCognitive Dissonance

    As discussed above, the Senate bill will add $1.5 trillion to the deficit over the next ten years. This is not up for debate. What is up for debate, however, is what the plan will cost after accounting for economic growth, or what is called the plan’s “dynamic score.” For months, deficit hawks within the GOP have been able to justify their vote for debt-financed tax cuts because Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Chief Economic Advisor Gary Cohn have continuously pushed the belief that the tax cuts will so dramatically boost the economy, that when it is all said and done, the bill will fully pay for itself. In other words, so much economic growth will be created by the plan that after ten years, there won’t be an additional $1.5 trillion deficit; rather, there will be no additional deficit at all.

    Mnuchin, Cohn and the like have remained steadfast in this belief, despite the presence of absolutely no empirical or anecdotal evidence to support such a claim. This refusal to accept battle-tested economic theory has, however, provided one fantastic moment of levity in this otherwise morbid process, as this article explains that of the 137 economists who reportedly signed a letter supporting the GOP’s tax plan, many are retired, others may have never been employed as economists, and one may not even exist, the elusive Gil Sylvia, who I can only assume is a distant cousin of the equally-elusive Pepe Silvia of It’s Always Sunny fame.

    As the ensuing paragraph describes, by the time the vote came around last night, ample evidence was available to disprove any hope that the plan would pay for itself. But that did nothing to dissuade a normally “fiscally conservative” party from choosing to add over $1 trillion to the debt over the next decade.

    Loser: The Country’s Credit Card Balance 

    If you read the paragraphs above and asked — “Well, where is your evidence that the tax plan WON’T pay for itself?” — I kindly direct you to the official scorekeepers of Congressional tax plans, the Joint Committee of Taxation. In this report, the JCT concluded that even after accounting for economic growth, the plan will add over $1 trillion to the deficit over the next decade. And that was the good news. The report from the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center wasn’t nearly as rosy, concluding that the bill will add $1.3 trillion to the deficit after factoring in economic growth.

    And you have to understand something very, very important: EVERY. SINGLE. INDIVIDUAL. TAX CUT. in the Senate bill is slated to expire on December 31, 2025. If these cuts are extended — which as discussed below, is clearly the intent — then the true cost of this plan goes well beyond $1 trillion over the next decade.

    Even in the face of the JCT’s tally, however, Mitch McConnell remained unfazed, choosing to double down by not only promising that the plan will pay for itself, but that it will actually further reduce deficits, stating, “I’m totally confident this is a revenue neutral bill. Actually a revenue producer.”

    You can decide for yourself who or what to believe: 100 years of sound economic theory and two independent analysis, or the promises of Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell, and the elusive Gil Sylvia.

    Winner: Big CPA Firms and Tax Lawyers 

    As an American taxpayer, I’m saddened by the way the process played out. A tax bill needs to be carefully considered, available to the public for review and contemplation well in advance of a vote, and — in a perfect world — bipartisan. That way, we can reap the benefit of the most valuable product of tax reform: permanence. Certainty of where the tax law will be in years 3 and 5 and 7 and 10, so that we can plan accordingly. With a Republican-led bill, however, the tax law is only as certain as Republican control; should things flip in 2020, the Code will be revamped again, and it will be taxpayers left struggling to respond to the changes.

    As a tax adviser, however, I’m downright giddy. Four weeks. The GOP thinks it can enact a dramatic overhaul of the law, adding substantial new legislation governing pass-through businesses and multi-national corporations, in only four weeks without leaving behind glaring loopholes and opportunities for (legal) manipulation. The hubris is both startling and appetizing.

    The eventual signing of the Senate bill into law, regardless of how it is ultimately married with the House bill, will signal the start of hunting season for tax professionals, who upon opening the pages of the new legislation (presumably, now minus the handwritten amendments) will find ample opportunity to game the system and minimize their clients’ tax liability. The irony, of course, is this is precisely what tax reform is supposed to avoid; but then, this was no ordinary tax reform process. After all, during the last meaningful overhaul of the Code — the bipartisan Tax Reform Act of 1986 — it took more than 14 months to go from proposed legislation to enactment; a full year longer than will be the case in 2017.

    Loser: Small Tax Preparation Shops

    Don’t get me wrong; the Senate bill also adds some much-needed simplicity to the tax law; it just happens to be centered on those who already had fairly simple returns. By doubling the standard deduction from $6,350 for single taxpayers/ $12,700 for married filing jointly to $12,400/$24,800, while simultaneously gutting the majority of itemized deductions, it is estimated that roughly 94% of taxpayers will claim the standard deduction in 2018. Thus, while high-income taxpayers will be pillaging the opportunity left behind by the revamped Code, many lower-income “W-2” filers will be basking in its newfound simplicity, confident enough to prepare their own returns now that it doesn’t require totaling itemized deductions on Schedule A. This could well cause a slow-down in business for those tax preparation shops that cater to pure compliance, rather than consulting. But on the other hand, it’s a great time to buy stock in Turbo Tax!

    Loser: Real Estate Brokers

    No more deduction for interest on home equity debt. A $10,000 cap on the deduction for real estate taxes. A new requirement that you own your home for 5 years — rather than 2 — before you can sell it tax-free. It’s not a great time to sell houses for a living.

    Winner: Rental Real Estate Owners

    It is a great time, however, to be a landlord. For starters, the life over which you can depreciate your property has been reduced — from 27.5 years to 25 years for residential property and from 39 years to 25 years for nonresidential property. In addition, while most other businesses will find their interest deduction limited under the Senate bill, that limitation doesn’t apply to landlords, who can continue to deduct their mortgage interest in full.

    Real estate owners will really enjoy a windfall, however, if the final bill adopts the House version of “pass-through” taxation. Under the House bill, all rental income will be subject to a top rate of 25%, as opposed to 39.6% under current law. Under the Senate bill, however, it appears that for those large landlords earning more than $700,000 annually, unless the rental properties or a management company pays out significant W-2 wages, the owners would be stuck paying a top rate of 38.5% on the income, a rate 13.5% higher than under the House bill.

    Winner: the Current President 

    On a day when President Trump desperately needed some good news (see: Flynn, Michael), a major step towards his first legislative victory was achieved. And then, of course, there’s the little matter of how much money the President will save under the plan; as discussed above, it is a great time to own a real estate empire.

    Loser: the Future President 

    It bears repeating: in the Senate bill, EVERY. SINGLE. INDIVIDUAL. TAX CUT. will expire on December 31, 2025. Why? Because as discussed earlier, the bill needed to comply with the Byrd Rule, and couldn’t add to the deficit beyond the ten-year budget window. Unfortunately, the Senate’s first run at legislation did just that, sending the writers back to the drawing board. The quick fix? Simply make all of the individual cuts being offered turn back into a pumpkin when the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve of 2025. The corporate cuts in the bill, however, are all permanent.

    Why would Republican leaders, keenly aware of a distrusting public’s view that these cuts were truly earmarked for big corporations rather than the middle class, fuel these concerns by making individual cuts temporary and corporate cuts permanent? Because Republicans are also keenly aware that should things swing, and a Democrat win the White House in 2024, the future President will face tremendous pressure — even by a Dem-controlled Congress — to extend any expiring individual cuts. Should the corporate cuts have been made temporary, however, a future Democratic President would have had a much easier time allowing those cuts to expire. Thus, by structuring the bill in the manner in which it did, Republican leaders ensure that both the individual and corporate cuts will survive.

    Whoever takes office in 2024 will have no easy task, as they will be greeted soon after by Fiscal Cliff 2, Republican Bugaloo. If the expected deficits caused by the plan come to fruition, our future leader will be tasked with balancing the need for additional revenue with the hugely unpopular decision to allow individual cuts to expire. I look forward to seeing President Kanye’s handling of the situation.

    Winner: Corporations, the Richest 1%, and the Middle Class (for now) 

    Make no mistake, corporations are the big winner under both the House and Senate bills. The drop in tax rate from 35% to 20% is monumental, and even after accounting for some base-broadening tax increases on the corporate side, these businesses will enjoy half of the total cuts provided for in the plan.

    And while it’s never a bad time to be rich, things just got a whole lot better. Under the Senate bill, the richest 1% — those earning more than $700,000 — will enjoy an increase in after-tax income in 2018 of 2.2%, and an average savings of $34,000 (by comparison, the middle class will see an increase of 1% – 1.5% in after-tax income in 2018).

    Ah…that middle class…the very group of taxpayers for whom this plan was designed, according to those who built it. While the majority of middle-income taxpayers will enjoy a tax cut right away, some won’t be so lucky, with the Tax Policy Center estimating that 15% – 20% of those earning between $86,000 and $300,000 will experience an immediate tax increase, resulting from the confluence of lost itemized deductions, eliminated personal exemptions, and slower indexing of the individual tax brackets.

    By the time the budget gimmicks prevalent throughout the plan run their course in 2027, however, things are much different for the middle class. If the individual cuts are not extended at the end of 2025, the middle class will not only be left with nothing by 2027, nearly 60% of those earning between $86,000 and $300,000 will pay more than if these cuts were never enacted. Oddly enough, even IF the individual cuts expire, by virtue of the steep corporate cuts, the richest 1% do just fine, with only 16% experiencing an increase relative to current law.

    Loser: The Poor 

    The poor technically aren’t losers under this bill; in truth, they’re not really impacted at all. That’s because the bill never intended to provide additional benefits to the poorest taxpayers. To illustrate: to soften the blow of lost personal exemptions, the child tax credit increases from $1,000 to $2,000. In addition, the income limits where the credit phases out are increased as well, from $75,000 (if single, $110,000 if married filing jointly) to $250,000/$500,000. Oddly enough, however, the additional credit is in no part refundable, meaning that if you have no tax liability at all, it’s not going to help. This gives rise to a strange result: someone making minimum wage with two kids won’t benefit at all from the additional $1,000 child tax credit, but someone making $495,000 with two kids will. What a world.

    So if the poor are breaking even, why do I have them listed as a loser? Because the Senate bill repeals the individual insurance mandate, which requires a taxpayer to pay a penalty to the IRS if he or she doesn’t obtain “minimum essential healthcare coverage.” And while not paying a penalty sounds like a good thing, by eliminating the financial penalty for not carrying insurance, millions of young, healthy individuals are expected to flee the insurance markets, raising premiums on those who remain behind. Thus, while the tax bill may not directly harm the poorest part of the population, rising premium costs will likely more than offset any minimal cuts they receive as part of HR 1.

    Winner: Fans of Complexity

    Do me this one small favor — the next time you hear any politician — Republican or Democrat — decry the complexity of the current tax law and promise to overhaul the Code in a way that leaves it simple, just ignore them. They don’t mean it. Simplicity will ALWAYS take a backseat to backroom deals and partisan politics.

    For example, as discussed above, the ONLY reason the individual cuts all expire at the end of 2025 is because they had to for the bill to become Byrd Rule compliant. To put it another way, simplicity only mattered until it threatened to cost Republicans unilateral control; once that was at stake, simplicity was thrown out the window and instead, we get a fiscal time bomb waiting for us in eight years.

    Or consider the dreaded alternative minimum tax. Republicans have long pointed to this parallel tax system as the embodiment of all that is wrong with the current law, creating confusion without adding value. Every Republican plan since the AMT’s inception would immediately and irreversibly eliminate the tax from the law, and this one was no different.

    Until, that is, late yesterday, when it looked like a few Republican Senators were wavering, jeopardizing vital votes.  To placate those with concerns, GOP tax leaders made some last minute concessions, offering additional breaks on pass-through income. Of course, when the bill can’t exceed $1.5 trillion and remain compliant with the reconciliation process, when you add more cuts, you have to offset that with more revenue, and McConnell and Senate Finance Committee leader Orin Hatch found that revenue by….you guessed it…reinstating both the corporate and individual alternative minimum tax computations.

    And make no mistake, much of the new law brings its own complexity to the Code. The 23% deduction for pass-through income is rife with limitations and phase-outs. The corporate add-back for excess interest expense will require considerable thought. And the new territorial international tax regime will challenge even the most astute tax attorney.

    The end, of course, justifies the means. The Senate got its tax bill, even if it does little to clean up the Code, and in many ways, makes it more clumsy to wield.

    Loser: Fans of Consistency 

    What a strange vote this was. Senators Collins and McCain voted FOR the tax bill — which largely declaws Obamacare by repealing the individual mandate — after refusing to vote for Obamacare repeal.

    Senator Flake — who voiced significant concerns over the debt-financed nature of the bill, going so far as to attempt to add a “trigger mechanism” that would have raised taxes if economic growth did not conform to expectations (it failed) — ending up voting for the bill anyway, AFTER the JCT and Tax Policy Center issued reports showing the bill’s detrimental fiscal impact.

    And Senator Corker, the lone Republican to vote against the bill, did so after playing an instrumental role in setting the bill’s $1.5 trillion price tag as part of the budget negotiation process.

    Perhaps the DJ 3000 said it best:

    So here we are. The Senate has done its job, and now all that is left is to merge the House and Senate bills and forward it on to the President for signature just in time for Christmas. But if it’s just the same to you, I think I’ll be sending this Senate bill back to the North Pole with Oscar the Elf, with hopes that he comes back in a few weeks with something a little less reminiscent of a stocking full of coal.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/anthonynitti/2017/12/02/winners-and-losers-of-the-senate-tax-bill/?ss=taxes#711758d0254